Arenberg - Portrait of a Family, Story of a Collection

Arenberg - Portrait of a Family, Story of a Collection

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First published on the occasion of the exhibition ‘Power and Beauty. The Arenbergs’, M – Museum Leuven, 26 October 2018–20 January 2019, and the festival ‘Five Centuries of Arenberg’, 20 October 2018–20 January 2019, an organization of KU[n]ST Leuven vzw, the joint venture of the City of Leuven and KU Leuven.

The Arenberg lineage belongs to the high nobility, whose estates, interests and familial connections have traditionally extended across borders. Through their prominent military role in European conflicts, the Arenbergs derived power, prowess and prestige. Their princely and ducal standing was equally reflected in the highly superior quality of their art collection, as they commissioned works from contemporaries such as Rubens, Van Dyck, and later Watteau. In the nineteenth century, the Duke of Arenberg’s newly established gallery in his palace in Brussels was renowned for its Flemish and Dutch masters, such as Brueghel and Jordaens, Rembrandt and Vermeer, and was explicitly recommended as a private museum in travel guides of the time: Vaut le voyage! This exceptional collection is also indicative of the practice of collecting art and promoting artists which has long been an integral part of the culture of nobility.

Arenberg Foundation

The Arenberg Foundation stands for the promotion of European history and culture.